Americans For Nonsmokers' Rights Celebrates Antismoking Milestone
Americans For Nonsmokersâ Rights
Celebrates Antismoking Milestone
Berkeley, Calif. (AP) â Thirty years after it began as just another quirky movement in Berkeley, the push to ban smoking in restaurants, bars, and other public places has reached a national milestone. For the first time in the nationâs history, more than half of Americans live in a city or state with laws mandating that workplaces, restaurants or bars be smoke-free, according to Americans for Nonsmokersâ Rights.
âThe movement for smoke-free air has gone from being a California oddity to the nationwide norm,â said Bronson Frick, the groupâs associate director. âWe think 100 percent of Americans will live in smoke-free jurisdictions within a few years.â
Seven states and 116 communities enacted tough smoke-free laws last year, bringing the total number to 22 states and 577 municipalities, according to the group. Nevadaâs ban, which went into effect December 8, increased the total US population covered by any type of smoke-free law to 50.2 percent.
According to the American Lung Association, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have laws or regulations restricting smoking in certain places. These laws range from simple, limited restrictions, such as requiring designated smoking areas in government buildings, to laws that ban smoking in virtually all public buildings, workplaces, restaurants, and bars.
Connecticut is among five states that prohibits smoking in all restaurants and bars. In addition, a growing number of private businesses and schools are restricting smoking throughout their facilities, and in numerous school districts, the ban extends to all school grounds and even at extracurricular venues such as playing fields and sports arenas.
It was the most successful year for antismoking advocates in the US, said Mr Frick, and advocates are now working with local and state officials from across the nation on how to bring the other half of the country around.
In a sign of the changing climate, new US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi banned smoking in the ornate Speakerâs Lobby just off the House floor this month, and the District of Columbia recently barred it in public areas. Arizona, Colorado, Hawaii, Louisiana, and New Jersey also passed sweeping antismoking measures last year.
âThatâs how life is now. Theyâre banning smoking everywhere,â said Rep Devin Nunes, R-Calif., an occasional smoker.
Susan Burgess, the mayor pro tem of Charlotte, N.C., said what is fueling the push is a US Surgeon Generalâs report released last June that found just a few minutes inhaling someone elseâs smoke harms nonsmokers, and separate smoking sections do not offer enough protection.
She said the report gave momentum to the antismoking front even in North Carolina â the nationâs No. 1 tobacco state â and influenced Nevada voters to approve a ballot measure banning smoking at restaurants, bars that serve food, and around slot machines at supermarkets, gas stations, and convenience stores. Nevada, where gambling and smoking had been assumed to go hand in hand, previously had one of the nationâs least restrictive smoking laws.
âThe Nevada vote shows that when people are given accurate information about the dangers of secondhand smoke, itâs almost a no-brainerâ they will support smoking controls, said Ms Burgess, founder of the antismoking group Smokefree Charlotte.
Not all elected officials and business owners embrace the cause. They maintain such laws drive away smoking customers and cut profits.
âThereâs a fear that we would lose restaurant business to nearby towns if we passed a smoking ordinance,â Moline, Ill., Mayor Don Walvaert said. âBefore acting, we would need real proof that cities have not experienced business losses because of smoking regulations.â
Nevadaâs smoking restrictions have been challenged in state court by a coalition of businesses. Opponents say the ban, which does not apply to the gambling floors of casinos on and off the Las Vegas Strip, is unconstitutional, vague, and unenforceable.
In Columbia, Mo., one business owner displayed his displeasure at a new local ordinance banning smoking with a sign: âSmoking allowed until Jan 9, City Council banning beer next, and hopefully, karaoke!â
RJ Reynolds Tobacco Co. plans to continue to fight smoking bans at adult-only businesses because it thinks such restrictions infringe on the rights of owners and adversely affect business, spokesman David Howard said from the companyâs headquarters in Winston-Salem, N.C.
But Columbia Mayor Darwin Hindman said studies show bans will not force smoking customers to go elsewhere. The Surgeon Generalâs report reached a similar conclusion.
âI donât think itâs a legitimate fear that bars and restaurants will lose business,â Mr Hindman said. âFrom what Iâve read, smokers keep going to bars and restaurants even after smoking is banned. Smoking restrictions should be based on health issues anyway.â
Amy Winterfeld, health policy analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures based in Washington, D.C., said smoke-free legislation is pending in at least seven states.
âWhen you see an issue like this passing in a number of states it does give it momentum in other states,â Ms Winterfeld said. âItâs certainly possible that a number of states will take it up this year.â